The Government must pursue a more ambitious customs agreement with the European Union (EU) than any yet proposed and work closely with industry to develop concrete proposals, ADS says today.
Introducing new customs processes for trade with the EU could add an estimated £1.5bn in annual costs to the UK aerospace, defence, security and space sectors represented by ADS – industries that collectively achieved £10bn in exports to the EU last year.
In an in-depth report on options for future customs arrangements – Building Brexit: Priorities for a future UK-EU Customs Arrangement – ADS makes five recommendations to the Government for trading arrangements in transition and after Brexit:
Examining the options for trade models proposed to date, the ADS Building Brexit report finds that leaving the EU on World Trade Organisation (WTO) terms with no deal would be the worst outcome for business, introducing costs and delays that could severely limit future trade.
ADS Chief Executive Paul Everitt said:
“Businesses who export from the UK to the EU and around the world are vital to our national prosperity. We need the Government and the EU to agree an ambitious deal that limits any future customs checks and allows free flowing trade across UK and EU borders.
“Potential annual costs of £1.5bn in our sectors from burdensome new customs processes would be a major concern to businesses and reduce our £10bn a year exports to EU nations.
“These new costs from delays and bureaucracy when we sell the products of our ingenuity to our customers overseas will harm the UK’s capacity to compete in international markets, and weaken the ability of industry to generate growth and jobs.
“Three quarters of our members believe a transition deal is important to them and fewer than half have IT systems in place that can manage new customs procedures.
“We need the Government to listen to industry, agree a deal that builds on light-touch customs arrangements we already have in place, and a transition period that maintains our EU membership until businesses are ready to make the necessary changes after Brexit.”
Options for future trading relationships between the UK and EU examined in detail by the ADS report Building Brexit: Priorities for a future UK-EU Customs Arrangement include: